Category: Top » Health » Medicine »


Author: Bruce Brightman | Total views: 47 Comments: 0
Word Count: 732 Date: Mon, 30 Apr 2007 4:40 AM

Your PMS Symptoms Can Be Relieved With Nutritional Supplements

It is estimated that as many as 85% to 90% of pre-menopausal women regularly experience mental and/or physical symptoms before the onset of menses. While symptoms are mild in most women, 8% to 20% experience symptoms that meet the clinical definition of pre-menstrual syndrome (PMS), a disorder characterized by moderate to severe symptoms of depression, irritability, fatigue, abdominal cramping, breast tenderness and headaches.

So, perhaps more people talk about the weather than about PMS, but, while we may not be able to change the weather, I think we can do something to help women successfully overcome PMS.

Research has shown nutritional supplementation to be very effective in helping deal with PMS. In one study, women who supplemented with 1200 mg per day of calcium carbonate for three months reduced PMS symptoms by 48%. Other studies have also seen “significant” improvements in women with 1000 mg and 1336 mg per day of calcium supplementation.

Now a new study has found that another supplement for bone health, vitamin D, may also help improve PMS symptoms.

One study, dealing with about 3,000 women over the course of 10 years, has some hopeful results. The study was with 1,057 women aged 27 to 44 years old who reported developing PMS and 1,968 women who reported no diagnosis of PMS

It was found that women with the highest intake of vitamin D (over 700 IU per day) were 41% less likely to suffer from PMS compared to women with the lowest intake of vitamin D (100 IU per day). In addition, calcium intake was also found to decrease PMS symptoms, with an intake of nearly 1300 mg per day from food sources found to decrease PMS symptoms by thirty percent compared to women with the lowest intakes of calcium (529 mg per day).

So, to the researchers, the results suggest, “that a high dietary intake of vitamin D and calcium may lower the risk of incident PMS.”

Other, more general, comments by researchers say that sometimes exercising helps. Sometimes dietary changes help and sometimes supplementation with B-vitamins, calcium or vitamin E help. But they stress that the effect that any of these have on PMS hormone levels is unknown.

Yoga and relaxation techniques are also known to be helpful.

Some studies have shown that women who suffer from the most severe form of the PMS blues (premenstrual dysphoric disorder) have lower levels of serotonin circulating in the blood stream.

Serotonin is a compound that helps to transmit signals among nerve endings in the brain and body and is believed to play an important role in the regulation of mood, sleep, sexuality and appetite.

So, increasing the level of serotonin in the body may help. There are various drugs on the market to help women to do this. However, because numerous unwanted side effects are associated with these drugs, researchers have investigated the effects of natural substances used by the body to create serotonin, thus, increasing the levels of serotonin circulating in the blood stream.

Because PMS hormone levels are a possible cause of the PMS blues, many doctors suggest synthetic forms of the hormones estrogen and/or progesterone, to stabilize hormonal levels, prevent ovulation and thus eliminate most symptoms of PMS.

Instead of synthetics, though, there are good natural alternatives.

Phytoestrogens are considered by many to be a natural substitute for synthetic hormones. Phytoestrogens are simply plant components that have an estrogen-like effect on the body. Found in soy beans, red clover and other plant foods, researchers believe that in women who have less PMS symptoms and a diet high in soy and other vegetables, phytoestrogens are responsible.

So it would seem that natural remedies are a great help in relieving PMS. A healthy, balanced lifestyle is of course important. But today’s active woman may not be able to spend much time each day to deal with her diet, or with exercise, as much as she would like to. Thus, as we see above, a good supplement, containing natural ingredients (which won’t cause any side effects and which are completely safe for the body) is a good, healthy option for relieving the PMS blues.

Though we don’t seem to be very near to a scientific understanding of PMS, there are remedies to help a woman to overcome PMS.

About the Author

Bruce Brightman is the founder and CEO of Life source labs, a leading manufacturer and distributor of vitamins and nutritional supplements. Visit www.lifesourcelabs.com for more information.




Rate, comment or bookmark this article

Seed Newsvine

Rating: Not yet rated

Bookmark this article in your preferred program
AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Comments RSS

No comments posted.

Add Comment

Your Name:


Your Email:


Comment

Enter the code shown

Visual CAPTCHA



Popular Articles in this cathegory

1: Viagra, Cialis, Provigro and Orexis Compared
When you are suffering from Erectile Dysfunction, you become vulnerable and easily led when it comes to the right medication. I am going to give you a brief review on four of the leading erectile dysfunction cures.

2: Can Phentermine Diet Pills Help You Lose Weight ?
Phentermine diet pills have been around for a long time The FDA (Food and Drug Administration) originally approved it for market back in 1959 as an appetite suppressant

3: Fixing Bad Hair "Plugs" With Recent Hair Transplant Techniques
The Old Way of Hair Transplantation When hair transplantation first came onto the scene, men and women with thinning hair or bald scalps (who had been hiding under their hats and scarves for years) finally had some hope Those who could afford this “new” technology ran to the first doctor who claimed they could cure their baldness

4: Discover How Simple Herbal Treatments Can Help With Fixing Erectile Dysfunction And Enhance Your Size.
Since its introduction in 1999, Viagra has made a commanding name for itself in the fixing of erectile dysfunction It was so triumphant that rivals have now moved in, in the form of two new drugs named Cialis and Levitra

5: Medicine in Elizabethan England
During the reign of Henry VIII (1485-1509) in England, the royal confiscation of monastic land s and church properties put a huge crutch on the entire charitable system Between 1536 and 1544, one would have to search far and wide for medical help, and there was absolutely no help for indigent people in the city of London


Creative Commons License
This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 License.
Spanish taslation